Length: 15-17.5 cm
Transverse: 20-22.5 cm
Antero-posterior: 10-12.5 cm
Weight: 1.2-1.8 kg
Volume:
The adult liver has a craniocaudal span of 15-17.5 cm, a transverse diameter of 20-22.5 cm, and an antero-posterior depth of 10-12.5 cm. It weighs between 1.2-1.6 kg (3.5 lbs.)
The liver is the largest gland in the body, accounting for about 2% of the body weight in adults and 5% in infants. It is also the largest abdominal organ. It usually weighs more in males than females.
The right lobe is usually six times as large as the left.
Since the left lobe is variably sized and is commonly congenitally small or absent.
A transverse diameter 20-22.5 cm, is therefore very variable.
Size
In the male, the liver weighs between 1.4 to 1.6 kg, and in the female, between 1.2 to 1.4 kg. Its greatest horizontal measurement is from 20 to 22.5 cm. Vertically, near the right surface, it measures about 15 to 17.5 cm., while its greatest antero-posterior diameter is on a level with the upper end of the right kidney, and measures 10 to 12.5 cm.
The linear measurements of the liver are not easy to apply in the clinical context. Sometimes the right lobe will reach all the way down to the iliac crest as a normal variant called a Riedel’s lobe. The size and shape of the left lobe is a better indicator of the size of the liver. Using planimetry and density conforming techniques, the volume and hence the size of the liver is more accurately assessed. This method is not yet automated and therefore only performed under special circumstances such as in the screening of candidates for liver transplantation. The normal volume of the liver is between 1200 and 1500 cc’s.
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A case of a larger than normal liver.
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A case of a smaller than normal liver.
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Size Applied Anatomy
This image shows a small lateral segment (II and III) of the left lobe. This condition is called congenital hypoplasia of the left lobe, implying that the person was born with this anatomic variant. It has no functional significance.
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In this patient, part of the anterior segment (V)of the liver is missing and the colon pokes its head through the missing right lobe segment. This condition is also congenital and has no clinical significance.
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Riedels lobe
Riedel’s lobe is a variant an inferior extension of the right lobe of the liver occurring more commonly in women. It is a normal anatomic variant and its presence changes both the size and shape of the right lobe of the liver.
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(Image courtesy of Ashley Davidoff M.D.) |
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(Image courtesy of Ashley Davidoff M.D.) |
18135.800 46136 Davidoff MD |
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42649c01 Davidoff art |